'Caiup Fire Girl reaching» Prepare for Later Life who are identified with the Camp-Fire Organization have been a,ked the question, “ Who are the Camp-Fire G*rls and what do they Our answer is that it is a cjvic youth serving organization w h ich lids in giving youth an op­ portunity to learn how to live suc­ cessfully. The record o f the or­ ganization both internationally, na­ tionally and locally is one that all Camp-Fire Girls and the adults who work -with Camp-Fire is proud of. The purpose o f Camp-Fi re is to provide opportunities for girls to have fun. make friends, acquire creative skills in arts and crafts along with an appreciation of the out of doors and to experience the democratic process In small, self- motivated groups toward the de­ velopment of total personality and a consciousness of community and homp responsibility. Its ohpective j3 to aid the girl in finding new interests and challenge in every day things. Her law which all Camp-Fire girls know by heart: Worship God, Seek Beauty, Give Service, Pursue Knowledge, Be Trustworthy. Hold Aon to Health, Glorify Work, Be ’ Happy, she interprets in these ways. She attends church, she ap- tea nature by studying r thus seeking beauty. She gives Sen'ice at any time that she is asked by her services to hospitals, invalids and older people. She maintains high standards in her schoolwork, she is trustworthy In all of her relatioahips, she studies and applies the rules of health, she earns honors for the work ahe does in her home, her school and her church. The results of these activities, she stays happy With these objectives we know that she will build character, high ideals, be able to budget time and money, seek and hold friend­ ships and many more goals which will aid in ability to meet life sit­ uations with poise and good judg­ ment. Here in Washington County our own Camp-Fire Girls have made nut-cups, book marks and scrap­ books for the children’s hospitals and veterans hospitals. They have assisted in the preparations for the annual Red Cross Seal Sale. They have served their churches and Sunday schools and they are go­ ing to serve even more so in the future. They have visited as a group, various community indus­ tries and projects and they have participated in the national pro­ gram for nutrition. This then, ans­ wers the question, "Who are the Camp-Fire Girls and what do they do? ’ Tou will be hearing much about them in the future. •’arm Account took«. Available A new supply of the Oregon Farm Account Book has been re­ ceived at the county extension of­ fice, reports County Agent Palmer S. Torvend. The record book wax prepared by the farm management department at Oregon State Col­ lege and is designed to simplify the job of keeping an accurate ac­ count of all farm business. It permits making out income tax retrnsu on the accrual basis and also supplies information that makes it possible to study strong and weak points of the farm bus­ iness. Approximately 135 farmers in Washington county used the Ore­ gon Farm Account Book last year, the county agent stated. The book includes inventory forms, production records, farm re­ ceipts, farm expenses, and space for additional records if the opera­ tor wishes to keep them. Also available at the county agent’s office is the Oregon Cash Farm Record Book. It contains only records required for comput­ ing income tax returns on the cash basis and does not provide complete inventory forms. A small charge is made for the books to cover the cost of print­ ing. Present income tax laws, both state and federal, require most farmers to file returns, the coun­ ty agent commented. An accurate set of farm records is necessary as the basis for an accurate tax return, he added, now is the time to get the right start on next year’s records with a good ac­ count book. T u b e r c u lin T e a t» If tuberculosis is ever to be eradicated, it will be by early find­ ing of every case and by muster­ ing all forces to arrest the disease beiore it can be spread to healthy persons. One of the aids the doc­ tor has in his TB detective work is the tuberculin test. This does not leil whether a person has the dis­ ease, but it does tell whether or not TB germs have ever entered the body. A small amount of tuberculin is injected into the skin through a tiny needle, as in the Mantoux test, or a tuberculin-treated patch is placed on the skin, as in Voll- nier's patch test. If the skin at that point shows a red, raised re­ action within a few days, the germ s are present, either in an active or inactive form. If a tuberculin test is positive, the doctor has an important clue with which to work. He will im­ mediately follow up with a chest X-ray and other tests to find out whether the germs have taken hold and the disease is developing In this way he often finds cases in the early stage when there are few outward symptoms, and when the disease can be most easily and quickly arrested. This column is sponsored, in the interest of better health, by: Washington County Public Health Association. ZOLA F. MORGAN, Executive Secretary. Navy Lepartment Short News Items The United States Navy added 70,000,000 horsepower to its fleet during World War II, equal to the total horsepower of the entire United States light and power in­ dustry. Of 7,000 Sea Scouts who volun­ teered for the Navy during World War II, 6,082 were commissioned in the Naval Reserve. More than half of the 285,000 Naval Reserve officers were former Boy Scouts. United States Navy Military and Ask for your free classified “ Sub­ civilian personnel purchased a to­ scriber Ad Cards” with each new tal of $1,698,000,000 worth of sav­ subscription or ’renewal. ’ They’ll ings bonds between September 1, 1941, and August 1, 1945. pay you real dividends. By scrapping ships not slated for the active fleet, the Navy could realize less than one per cent of their original cost. Instead, the ALOHA GRANGE Navy will preserve 2,200 ships in two inactive fleets for 20 years at approximately the same cost as their scrap value. The volume of liquid fuel ship­ ped overseas in the last year by the Navy and the Merchant Ma­ at Aloha Grange Hall rine was nearly 16 times that of Bazaar opens at 4 P. M. food. Overseas forces required nearly twice as many tons of oil Dinner, 5;30 P. M. to 7:30 P. M. as of all other supplies combined. The Navy estimated that the Dinner Tickets— Adults $1.00; Children, 60c Women’s Reserve replaced more DO YOUR XMAS SHOPPING EARLY than 50,000 men for sea duty in World War II, enough to man a major task force. During 1945 United States Navy period of one month, the daily chaplains conducted 407,577 divine consumption of the Pacific fleet services which were attended by averaged about 290,000 barrels. 82,603,684 persons, performed 12.- I Of the 1,725,000 tons of major 501 marriage ceremonies, 14,951 fu­ warshipjs lost by the Japanese in nerals and 15,088 niaptisms. ac the last war, Ametican carrier- cepted 13»IS men and women into based aircraft accounted for most the church and visited 5,311.408 with 680,000 tons sunk. Subma­ persons in hospitals, sickbays and rines destroyed 507,000 tons and surface ships 257,000 tons. Dand- brigs. P e rh a p s th e s h o rte s t bombing based aircraft accounted for only mission in history occurred during 62,500 tons. In the invasion of Northern Eu­ the invasion of Peleieu when Unit­ ed States Marine pilots flew 1.400 rope a large part of the oil de­ yards from the end of the runway mand was transported by sixteen on the recently captured airfield petroleum lines laid along the floor to Bloody Nose Ridge to drop na of the English Channel from Dun- palm fire bombs in support of | geness thirty miles to Boulogne and four lines from the Isle of Marine infantrymen. Along with ten thousand techni­ Wight seventy miles to Cherbourg. cal instruments used to measure 1 Continental requirements were met the effect of the atomic bomb on on a ten day basis. ships of the United States Navy, beer cans and gasoline drums were used to show the degree of crush­ Surplus Supplies ing pressure the bomb exerted at Available certain points. From Pearl Harbor to V-J Day. proximately 100 marine clocks of the United States Navy grew from various types are available from fewer than 345 to 1.300 combatant government surplus for nautical ships, from 7,800 vessels of all and industrial uses, the War As­ kinds to onearly 93,000, from 425.- sets administration's general pro­ offieers and men to over 4.000.000 ducts division announced today. Thirty-eight commando and vic­ wartime peak strength, including Marine Corps and Coast Guard tory-type revolvers, originally in­ tended for military use, are for personnel. In its program to assist contrac­ sale exclusively to law enforce­ reported. tors who were unable to obtain ment agencies, WAA private financing, the United They are 38-caliber with 4-inch States Navy during World War II barrels and are offered at set made advance payments and guar­ prices in any quantity. Under anteed loans totalling $4,236.002 present regulations small arms are at an overall loss ration f only not sold to other outlets. About 600 tons of steel struc­ .00043. Less than three out of every t u r a l aluminum scrap and trim­ hundred Navy and Marine wound­ mings, a clean-up of various lots ed died in World War II. as com­ of material in this area, are of­ pared with more than eleven out fered to the highest bidders in of a hundred in World War I. list No. 394 issued by the metals Death from disease was less than division. The Spokane WAA office will one tenth that of World War I. despite the fact that fighting in hold a quarter of a million dollar the recent war took place in far clearance sale at the Walla Walla air base, with veteran buying days more unhealthy regions. The Navy has developed a hu­ November 13 through November man centrifuge capable of simulat­ 18. Typical items on sale are fly­ ing an altitude pressure of 60.000 ing clothing, wool blankets, T and feet and air speeds approaching strap hinges, padlocks, beds and 1.000 miles an hour for testing hu­ mattresses, canvas covers and car­ man reactions at supersonic riers, upholstered chairs with ot­ tomans, foot lockers, cooking pots, speeds. The greatest sustained demand grease intereepter and parachutes. for Navy fuel oil was during the Veterans are cautioned they must Okinawa campaign where for a he certified under th businss, pro fessional or agricultural use pro­ visions. Over 400 lots of miscellaneous materials, including short supply items, will be offered on a spot bid sale Nov. 18 to 22 at the U. S Naval Storehouse, South Tacoma by the Seattle WAA office. Towing hawsers, socket wrenches, machine P a c k a g e BEAVERTON ENTERPRISE Friday, N ovem b er 2 9 , 19 4 6 dies, firemen’s axes, hand drills, wood chisels, screw drivers, pipe vises, blasting machines, files and pick mattocks are among the sup­ ply listed. P d o w e r E A R LIE S T E LE C T R /C CELLS W ER E WET. N O N -PO R TABLE, V f=£i T E H H /B it I ') A N D R A N D O W N R A P ID L Y . ü__ _ ,, HVDROCEM F /L M COLLECT­ IN G O N COPPER P LA T E Q UICKLY PO LARIZED THE VOLTA 1C CELL. S TO PPIN G F LO W O F C U R P F N T . l e c ¿ a n c h e d e v e l o p e d THE f ir s t PRACTICAL W E T CELL IN 1 3 6 8 . C O N TAIN IN G A D E P O L A R IZ E R O F M A N G A N E S E D IO X ID E . WHICH REMOVED THE HYDROGEN F /L M . I 1 j T h e n , i n /8Q7. d r . c a r l g a s s - NER. JR. PRODUCED THE FIR ST D R Y C E L L : THE Z IN C ELE­ M E N T W A S THE C O N ­ T A IN E R . IT W AS PORT­ AB LE . __ _ THE F IR S T COMMERCIAL D R Y CELLS WERE PRODUCED/N /3 9 0 . AT CLEVELAND OH/O. B Y M ANUFACTURERS O F PRESENT D A Y 1 HIGH ENERGY BATTERIES. A M ilN G M A N Y USES TOD 1 Yjr DRY CELL J BATTERIES SUPPLY . J l CURRENT TO E F F IC I­ E N T B U T HA RHL ESS ELECTRIC FEN C ES. Furls and figures, courtesy H reread y Batteries Copyright. 1946, J. V. Clirke'’ NAVEL O RAN GES Turkey Dinner and Bazaar! Saturday, Dec. 7 Ah CVS • 0 H 5 lbs. 65 Navel Oranges Sweet, Juicy, Smooth Textured — No Seeds T a b le G r a p e s AS OUR FAKIltyGROWS - it costs m o re to W Im / s u p p o rt it ! Red Emperors G rap efru it A riz o n a M arsh seedless C a u liflo w e r F orm freshj U S. No. 1 Potatoes Dry Onions w . lb. 22' lb. 5 Vi lb. 16' lb. 6' lb. 5' lb.10' C arrots N o tops to pay fo r R u ta b a g a s Groded U S No I Parsnips Local crop 25 lb QCc E* sock I0 lb sock U S N o l's M e d iu m sizes fa n cy pock APPLES Apples fo r cooking, Apples fo r eahng. CQc 15-lb sock Deschutes 'A ’ size E xtra fo n cy ond ^ Q c B oilers Q Q Safeway has the— A p p le fo r your purpose. lb. 12c lb. 12* Delicious 1 0 lb .sk . Winesaps ¿ i m e \ 'V # Produce features are e ffe ctive Friday and Soturday Fresh W ith two telephone subscribers there is only one possible connec* tion. W ith three subscribers the system must provide for three connec­ tions. H ow many connections are required for twelve?* The answer is 66, and for 100 subscribers we must provide facilities for 4,950 possible conversations! As the telephones increase, the necessary wires and con­ nections multiply astronomically. Even with the most modern switch­ boards and equipment, the cost per telephone rises as the facilities grow larger in each exchange. Telephone rates in almost every exchange o f the W est Coast Telephone Company are from 20 to 28 years old, and are based on \ system much smaller than the one we operate today. Our maintenance costs, installation costs, equipment, w a g e s ... all o f our operating costs have increased until we have found it an economic necessity to request a moderate increase in our rate structure. ( * ) Work out the telephone puzzle for yourself. Place 12 dots in a circle on a blank sheet of paper and see hou many lines you can drati connecting all of them together. 3 c 3 9 8 C ¿ ¿ tu fa , B EEFSTEAK ß |. c b *** Beef Pot Roast FE A TU R E S Grade » * T-Bone — Porterhouse R oun d— Sirloin Tip or Cube Steak Leg of Lamb Roast tn In most modern industries it is the other way around— the more units involved, the smaller the cost per unit. The telephone industry is perhaps the only major field where it is more expensive to operate a large number o f units than it is a smaller quantity’. L i lb .« ' Prime Turkeys Toms '^L 20 43‘ 20 lbs and 41c ove* Hens per lb 5 7 e n>. 53' Pork Loin Roast fC?, lb. 57' • Yes, it is an unusual fact, but the greater the number o f telephones in our system, the more it costs us to operate each one o f them! 3 -b J a sa M Jn o A Jb u i ¿VLàcaMxhui Chickens Fowl, cut up lb. 59* Fryers, cut up lb. 75' M eot fe o tu re t ore fo r Fndoy ond Soturdoy m m iu u ; i n u m i W e reserve th e rig h t to L im it Q u a n titie s f»« get mart 1 er year me» », ef SAFEWAY AH prices Subiect to Chonge W ith o u t notice. r $ ■ ■ ■ I ■ ■ $ ■ I I I $ ■ ■ ■ I $ ■ I ■ $ $ $ $ I ■ ■ I $ ■ $ ■ I ■ ■ I I I I I I I I ■ I ■ • I $ $ I I I I ■ 4 4 c ■ i iV z-lb 4 A c Loof ■ ™ Ritz Crackers I lb 2 9 « T asty wafers box Graham Crackers 1 lb Honey M a id 25' box Soda Crackers 2 lb. 4 4 ( box Knspy brand Pitted Dates 601 Porto Row pkg 2 5 ‘ ■ w i r & P lb Airway Coffee whole bean bog Hills Coffee, Regular or drip 1 - lb con 43 LITTON 48 bog ^ 4 t ’/ 2 -lb pkg 5T t e a Cm s a r pkg J O F ull N o 2 46 o r can Orange Juice ’ O 'G o ld can N o 2 «| 46-oz ^ con Blended Juice O Blend ' G old con 46-oz 2 9 c Town Grapefruit Juice House con Texas Grapefruit Juice T ip 46 con oz A C C No 2 con i r Tomato Juice, Sunny Down Fruit Cocktail Hostess D e lig h t con 37‘ Mrs. Wright's Bread l ib Lo ot How to CAN or FREEZE leftover TURKEY The beauty ol roasting your own turkey, and especially a big one. is that you can have plenty oi leftovers for leftovers are no problem these days It’s so simple and easy to can or freeze them for another day. Fruit Mix M a r Bud Cheese Spreads K R AFT Assortm ent 5-oz A F C Glass A w Tomatoes G ardenside N o. 2V4 A C c can «»w Peas Sogarbelle N o. 2 con Canning Leftover Tnrkey: Remove meat from carcass, combine with cream sauce or gravy, pack in hot sterilized jars with screw top lid. Tighten lids completely, and process in pressure cooker 75 min­ utes at 10 pounds pressure, or for 3 hours in hot water bath. Treating Leftover Tnrkey: Place slices or pieces of roast turkey in heavy cello­ phane bags, seal with hot iron. Freeze at below zero temperature. To serve, reheat to serving temperature, or thaw and slice cold. Freezing Creamed Tnrkey: Cut meat from carcass, pack in meal-sized quantity in containers used for freezing fruits. Cover with cream sauce or gravy. Freeze at be­ low zero temperature. To serve, remove frozen block from container and heat in top of double boiler. Use a la king, in meat pies, hash or croquettes. Freezing Tnrkey Senp: Use bones of car­ cass to make soup stock, cool quickly. Package in cylindrical type containers. Freeze at below zero temperature. To serve, remove frozen block from con­ tainer. heat and use as a base for turkey- vegetable soup. Q c u w L (D a o I u l Direetor THE HOMEMAKERS BUREAU An r rira Smfmmy im im 49* 14-oz pkg 4 Q • “ Canned Pumpkin Libby bra nd No 2 \ 2 4 7 c con I # Sweet Potatoes M a ry dole N° 2 vi o r e can M Crab Legs M io est Barbecued 3 '2 o r con ■ §/ Cigarettes P o p u lo r b ra n d s S 4 C o rto n Blu White Blues os it washes pkg 2/15* Silver Cream 19' W n g h t’s Grade A Butter D a iry fresh lb. 85' Grade A Eggs Dozen 61'¡Cl 66' This is NATIONAL RADiO WEEK Tun* in your la vont* station